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VCDX – Design Scenario Strategy

06/16/2014

D-day has arrived, you have just completed the 75 minute session presenting and defending your design. You have left the room for the 10 minute break and now you have returned for the 30 minute “Design Scenario”. How should you tackle this task? What should be your strategy?

This exercise only requires you to deliver a LOGICAL design, not PHYSICAL. So ignore steps 4 and 5 of the diagram below.

Do not waste time on PHYSICAL components unless specifically asked to.

This strategy gives you 5 minutes of time to earn extra points with additional questions.

The panelists want you to succeed, listen carefully to their responses for clues and hints.

React to their answers if something does not make sense.

Each scenario has additional hidden bonus points; the panelists are following a script where you need to ferret out the information by asking the correct questions.

Start with the silo you are most comfortable with after the Conceptual Model (assuming it is a deliverable for the scenario), this will get you started and then give you a chance to warm up.

Make sure you deliver whatever is requested in the scenario slides.

Try to post three logical design decisions in each area.

Speak out loud, you cannot score points if you are silent.

Thirty minutes is not enough time to build any kind of complete design, you just need to demonstrate your ability to extract information from the customer and begin the process of laying the foundation.

Be mindful of the 30 minute timer, stick to your strategy and be wary of the “Rabbit Hole” – do not get stuck in one section, spinning your wheels, asking questions that do not advance and improve your position.

Practice, practice, practice. This is an important part of the defence, you should have mocked this scenario with your Study Group at least 6 times before D-Day.

Conceptual Model – Possible Questions: (1-5min)

What are the panelists asking you to deliver? Complete these deliverables first.

What is the Design Objective?

What are the Requirements, Constraints & Assumptions?

What is the Budget?

What equipment do you have allocated to this project? Do you have existing vSphere infrastructure/licences? If yes, can it be used for this project?

Do you have an Enterprise Architecture?

Is there a long-term strategy for this project?

What is the availability of the design?

Is it a multi-site solution with BC/DR? (If yes, what are the RPOs and RTOs)?

Compute (6-10min)

My previous blog post on Host Design covers this in detail. Other possible questions to consider:

PCIe/USB dongles required as part of P2V process?

VMDirectPathI/O should be used?

Right Size VMs after conversion?

Storage (11-15min)

Possible questions to consider:

FC, FCoE, iSCSI, NFS, VSAN, vFRC?

Tiers of Storage?

Peak IOPS, IO sizes, etc.

LUN sizes (remember Predictive or Adaptive method)

Possible Calculation 1 – Peak storage capacity required?

Possible Calculation 2 – Peak IOPS required?

Possible Calculation 3 – Average IO Size?

Possible Calculation 4 – Read/Write Ratios?

Possible Calculation 5 – Number of Disks per Tier?

Storage Array: Active/Active, Active/Passive or ALUA?

RAID Configuration, Disk types?

Have an understanding of RAID Levels – RAID-0, 1/0 or 1, 5, 6, DP with respect to Cost, Performance, Space Utilisation and Recoverability. For example:

Example Storage Logical Design Deliverable:

Network (16min-20min)

Possible questions to consider:

Traditional or Clos-type Switch Architecture?

Traffic flows: North/South or East/West?

VDS/VSS/Cisco Nexus 1000V?

Hybrid or VDS only?

1GE or 10GE?

CNA or 10GE?

Possible calculation: What is the peak network throughput required (north/south and east/west)?

[…] and Troubleshooting scenarios that are also a part of the defense. Check out @vcdx133‘s VCDX – Design Scenario Strategy and VCDX – Troubleshooting Scenario Strategy post. Some great tips and insights into preparing […]

[…] time to cover all the pillars in the time allocated for the design scenario. The best method IMO is one blogged about by Rene van den Bedem. Rene created this when he was preparing for his second VCDX attempt and i was preparing for my […]